Why Wait 8 Months for a COVID-19 Booster Shot?
US health officials unveiled a booster shot program this week that says that some people should get the shots 8 months after their last initial dose. Where did that number come from?
Why 8 months? As the delta variant fuels yet another
The Biden administration
The vaccines are still very effective, public health officials say. Even without the booster shots, they offer protection against severe illness and death. Until just yesterday, hospitalizations would have been included in what the vaccines cut down on and they still are, but now there’s a caveat.
The
The Times headline: “In a Handful of States, Early Data Hint at a Rise in Breakthrough Infections.” In the article, the newspaper reports that in 6 states “breakthrough infections accounted for 18% to 28% of recorded cases in recent weeks. Breakthrough infections accounted for 12% to 24% of COVID-related hospitalizations in the states.”
This has not gone unnoticed by federal public health officials. At a
But again, how did public health officials decide that boosters should be given at 8 months prior to the last dose? Why not 7? Or 6? Or 5? (Infection Control Today® emailed that question to the Department of Health and Human Services but has not yet received a response.)
As ICT®
Kevin Kavanagh, MD, a member of ICT®’s Editorial Advisory Board
Kavanagh said in an email to ICT® that “with the Israel data email ICT® published showing that individuals greater than 60 years old and 5 months out from full vaccination plus the recent New York Times data showing that between 12% to 25% of hospitalizations are breakthrough infections, one must ask the question: Why wait 8 months for boosters? This underscores the importance of using the vaccine as a layer of armor and not a panacea. Those vaccinated at the same time need to wear N95 masks and avoid indoor settings.”
Meanwhile, as IPs and other health care professionals will attest, the frontlines bear the brunt of a full-on COVID-19 surge. On the CNN show
“But,” she said, “we very much need to be giving these third doses to those individuals who absolutely didn’t get an initial first rise, that’s the group that was talked about last week, and we need to give boosters to those of us whose immunity is waning.”
On the same program, Peter Hotez, MD, PhD, the dean of tropical medicine at Baylor College of Medicine, said that “we’ve been watching this out of Israel now for a few weeks where they have shown the protection against infection has gone down from 95% down to 40% to 50%. They made the statement they haven’t seen the breakthrough hospitalizations. Although I tend to concur with Dr. Marty anecdotally. We’re hearing about quite a number of breakthrough hospitalizations.”
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